Elephant
I left him living with my Mum and Dad. I liked to think of him squashed on my bed beside the piano; chewing liquorice allsorts; finding the white china ponies, in my trunk, with his; listening to swifts build their nests in the eaves.
The authorities then put a stop to it. Elephants are always denied accessto homes in the countryside, they wrote. But he’s always lived there, I protested. He’s no danger to flora, fauna or strangers. My pleas were rejected.
He moved out, seduced by a witch. Mum whispered, He’s gone: a crack in her voice. It took time but I did track them down,
to a brand-new apartment in town: silent and stinking of cabbage. He was shivering; wrapped in her shawl, in the gloom of a room at the top of a high-rise. The curtains stayed closed up all day. (She’d not have him see the lines on her face, the grey in her hair or that wart on her chin!) I had to sneak him away.
Squeezing him into the lift was a struggle.
I bought him a phone and a home over-looking the sea! Now we speak every day he says he’s Okay. Lonely?Maybe.
When I visit, he unbolts the door with the tip of his tusk. We stroll down to the sun-drenched shore: past the jelly-bean huts to the breakwater.
Curling up against the heat-wave, he flaps his great ears to cool me, and sprays water, like soda, all over my head, feet and hands.
We sift memories together, like sand. |